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India expects bumper rice harvest

By Mayank Bhardwaj
Reuters
First Posted 15:13:00 10/03/2008

Filed Under: Food, Agriculture, rice problem, Economic Indicators

NEW DELHI -- India has bought 700,000 tons of the new season rice from farmers in recent days, signalling another bumper harvest after buying a record 28.4 million tons last crop year, a government official and analysts said.

Bulging stocks at state warehouses could mean an early resumption of non-basmati rice exports, halted in early April to shore up domestic supplies when rice stocks in many countries had fallen and benchmark prices in Thailand had soared.

The government usually begins buying rice from October but started procuring ahead of schedule as some early sown varieties reached wholesale markets last month, Alok Sinha, managing director of the Food Corp. of India, told Reuters.

"In 2007/08, we procured 28.4 million tons rice against a target of 27.6 million tons, and in 2008/09 we have already got more than 700,000 tons. We began buying early on the request of leading rice producing states in the north," he said.

The Food Corp. of India, the custodian of the country's grains, buys rice and wheat at government-fixed prices to supply to the poor at subsidized rates. Higher stocks with the Food Corp. also help the government keep a check on domestic prices.

Analysts say early procurement is the first tangible sign of a good crop size and could encourage the government to loosen trade curbs.

India recently allowed exports of Pusa-1121, a premium non-basmati variety.

The government should now allow shipments of at least limited quantities of other non-basmati varieties as lower prices have spurred demand from the Philippines, Africa and Cuba, said Vijay Setia, president of the All India Rice Exporters Association.

Benchmark prices in Thailand on Wednesday fell 1.4 percent to $710 per ton from $720 last week as demand waned, traders in Bangkok said, well below the record of $1,080 per ton marked in April.

Setia said the government should end the export ban as expected high local output would further lower global prices. India, the world's second-biggest grower of the staple, last month forecast summer-sown rice output would touch a record 83.25 million tons against 82.81 million tons a year earlier.

The summer-sown crop makes up the bulk of India's total rice output of more than 95 million tons.



Copyright 2009 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



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